98 130 East 50th Street NEW YORK'S NEWEST AND SMARTEST HOTEL REST AURANT d) ETHEL SHUTT A Star of Radio, Stage and Screen "Radio" Frank Bessinger The Bachelors Belmont Balladeers Val Olman AND HIS ORCHESTRA De luxe Dinners from $1.50. Luncheons from 65c Belmont Plaza Richard E. Daley, Manager A LEXINGTON AVE. at 49th ST. N ationaLHotel Management Co.,Inc. Ralph Hitz, President ...... .' ............ ,..-ø'" '< ...,. .t.f - ':""::: "" " , "..":,-> ; "" '1" . , , ' ... : .. t a.,... ::ø,.N ... ""' tî r- .. %' . ,H, . , : ';Z:;:: Ä . ..... , - .où:;-:s ....... ..:.::. 2,000 T-MIJ, Situ Stæeú iu. JMrJ 1.ivæd 01- 1 7 Two and three times as many sheets as in ordinary rolls! No won- der you save with Satin Tissue! So soft and sheer this extra-value roll fits all fixtures. Safe for every- one! In Pure White, Natural and smart colors. 25ø a roll or in 4-roll cartons. At better drug, grocery and department stores. Or, write A.P.W. Paper Co., Albany, N. Y. . . c/;fiJl. JiJftl pIe idea of the sketch. Leo McCarey directed the nonsense, however, with an eye for every absurdity, and without fear of blatant and raucous farce. His courage is justified, for otherwise it might have been too polite and tepid a piece of work. Irene Dunne, smooth and airy, floats along through the bus- tle of farce with admirable composure. Cary Grant makes a presentable hus- band, and Ralph Bellamy manages well as a rich oil man much harmed by the young wife. Divorce problems handled cover the difficult question of the cus- tody of the dog, the wife's beau, the heiress in pursuit of the husband, the beau's and the heiress's relatives, and the connubial agony of the last minutes before the decree would have been final, when the couple are reunited. It's a bright sketch to divert the mature. ) I N "Heidi," Shirley Temple milks a goat, sings "In Our Little Wooden Shoes," sings two hymns, dances a min- uet, leads the singing in church, advises us "Everybody ought to go to church on Sundays," cures a lame girl of her afflic- tion, brings wealth and happiness to her old grandfather, plays with a monkey, and doesn't look a day older. I should say that Leslie Howard does seem a bit aged in "It's Love I'm After," but that may be the fault of the farcical efforts of the comedy. There seems something rather musty and familiar about most of the predicaments in this movie. The matinée idol and his temperament aren't new, nor is the silly girl who gets a crush on him anything startling. As a favor to the girl's true love, the actor tries to disillusion her and show her what a cad he is. That his antics make her love him the more goes without saying. At last she is cured, and the actor goes back to his theatre and his leading lady. Olivia de Havilland, Bette Davis, and Eric Blore are among the comic folk assembled. O UR underworld offering this week is "Trapped by G-Men," a negli- 'gible thriller mth Jack Holt and Wynne Gibson. Miss Gibson plays the G-girl required by the plot, although not men- tioned in the title. 'Robert Benchley's in- spirational short film, "A Night at the Movies," may have too much plot, butthe star survives it. The serious thinkers can go to "The Return of Maxim," another Soviet film, and a pious and sombre history of revolution. There are big and dramatic moments toward the end of this movie, after prolonged intro- ductory passages about Czarist Russia as the war came upon it. -JOHN MOSHER NOVEMDER..I , 1937 :.-:' ,itl t ,:'i .... .. "\ tt '" . : ", : , J-- . , , : : , , : , : , ;.^, ..,:, = .;=:-., @" '.. :' -it ".., , :: ; ,- 1ft r;t:.:..1t.... r? :- 'y , . ii ?* i 1 t : ,,:." .., :(: :-:..w....... ,"" .? ',*, , ,,>'wm' , tm '\ :4 ' !I' 1 f. fJ - t f :..:;.. ;.;:";: :. . .:';: -.: < {.... :' : :. ', CO'" G'- O\.\Ñ \" 1 dr og stOreS i ot 0 i ".-.:" ....>.:..,:::-:: , t"::';:::': ';::' $:1.*, % :::.:= I .. '\ 0 R K. C H A k q I 1'", J(ýmotU ./ n J """"- - Db1E:'S.'.N.O' T \ - " ','.. "\ ( ' - St -!Þ" L - .. A,,' WORLD'.;" ,- k 110-112 EAST 14th STREET On the way to Everywhere 50 WEST 45 EYMOUR